Sunday, February 18, 2018

Teaching Teachers



One of my jobs as an instructional coach is to plan and implement professional development. This is no easy task. I don't mind speaking in front of groups and there are lots of topics I find interesting enough to research and present. It's the buy-in factor. I think the most important part of my job is to get teachers to want to be part of my sessions, to want to learn about the idea that I am presenting on. Teachers are a tough bunch. I know, I have been one for a while now. I am just as judgmental about district meetings and professional developments that I sit through as a participant. I have been part of the group that talks in the back because it is so boring I would otherwise be asleep. I know, not my best side. 

About 5 years ago I was asked to participate in a cadre of teachers that would get together and plan the professional development for our school site. This was a win-win for me, I got to get out of my participant chair and also got to have input on what we focused on as a school site. This model has worked well for us. Our teachers are more invested, there is more input on what is focused on, and this cadre played a large role in JBMS being named a 2017 Gold Ribbon School. 

As I moved from teacher to teacher leader to instructional coach, I have taken on more of the day to day responsibilities of instruction at the school site. It has been eye opening and at times challenging. Early in January, fresh from the 3 week holiday break, I faced one of these challenges. I am part of 3 person team that oversees instruction. My math/science counterpart went on maternity leave a bit earlier than expected. The assistant principal who oversees instruction, and who is also my rock at school, went on bereavement leave. This left me. With three Tuesday professional developments (PD) in a row. The cadre of teachers stepped up and helped where I needed it but I knew it fell to me to get the job done. So I did the best thing I knew how to do - I baked. I spent an entire day baking cupcakes, big ones, small ones, and making frosting. I had planned a hands-on, Design Thinking professional development and I wasn't going to fail. 

The day went smoothly. More so than I thought it could. At the end I not only had fun, I learned a lot. I learned that everyone likes hands-on activates, not just kids. I learned that candy and cupcakes make learning more fun, and I learned that I have grown so much in my 18 months out of the classroom. 




The PD was based on the story of the Gingerbread Man having survived the holidays without getting eaten. He now has a bucket list of things he wants to do and needs an vehicle to do it. The parameters were simple:
  • The vehicle must be able to travel on land, air, and water
  • The vehicle must have a power source
  • The vehicle must have a navigation system. 


The teachers were put into random groups as they came into the room, they were given all kinds of candy, cookies, and cupcakes and set loose. This is where it got interesting for me. I had anticipated that each group would take 1 cupcake and put wheels on it, make a seat and that would be that. What I didn't see coming was the scope of vehicles that were designed. This afternoon showed me that listening and putting ideas together from multiple people of different backgrounds can result in amazing things. I was truly blown away by the designs and the thought that the staff put into their designs. 


At the end of the activity, each group did a 30 second presentation, recorded on their iPads and submitted it to the student leadership at our school site. The students watched the videos, made a video of their own to showcase the winning group that was announced the next week, we also gave out $5 Starbucks cards to the winning teachers.


This past week I went in to a science class to pick up a student that I needed to speak with and the students were working in groups with pipe cleaners, fabric, tape and lots of fun things. I asked what they were working on and it turns out they were creating an all terrain vehicle with a power source and navigation system. This is why I left the classroom. Not because I wanted to stop teaching. I wanted to reach more students and by teaching teachers, I can do that. 




















 


Monday, February 5, 2018

Report from the Field

Teachers practicing with the green screen
I love teaching, which is why it was such a hard decision for me to leave the classroom to become an instructional coach. The 2 years before I made the move I had become involved with the instructional cadre at my school site; we got together regularly and planned professional development for our colleagues. I really enjoyed being part of this group, taking what I knew, adding it to what others knew and sharing it with the everyone. 

For any teachers, administrators, coaches out there, this is a fantastic model that has shown real results at our school site. Our staff collaborates more, is willing to take more risks, and is more invested in the professional development sessions. 


Teachers during a PD session in the Makerspace
When I started on the journey to create the Makerspace this past spring I wasn't sure what would happen. I could name 5 teachers who would want to use it, think it was a good idea, and bring their classes in. I wasn't sure about the other 70 teachers. As with any professional development I lead, it's about the buy in. So we showed it to the teachers. We had them make their own green screen videos. We had them participate in a design thinking lesson. We let them simmer with the idea. I didn't go around asking teachers to sign up, asking them what lessons they could do in the Makerspace. I let them talk to each other. Recently when an 8th grade history teacher asked me about using the green screen, I sent her to a 7th grade history teacher who had done it recently to see the results. 

And so she bought in. Instead of assigning a research paper, as she had done the last few years, as a culminating activity for Lewis and Clark, she took a leap. For a week she let her students plan, research, and record their learning.  Here is a portion of the e-mail she sent me at the end of the week:
"We used the cloth and feathers for costumes for Lewis, Clark and Sacajawea, and some heavy card stock for prompter cards for actors.  Little mushroom stools were really helpful in getting kids in place for the green screen shooting.  We had a lot of fun making our creations. I may miss you, so I was wondering if you would mind sending someone to fetch the key.  If not we will connect I am sure. This was a really neat opportunity and the kids had a blast.  We all learned a LOT!"
Not only did she buy in, her students bought in. They got to learn, play, and create. This is what education should be about. This is what education is about.







Saturday, February 3, 2018

Conference Musings


People are never one thing. Tonight as. I write this from my hotel room at the California League of Schools Technology with a Purpose 2018 conference I am many things. I am exhausted after yesterday’s flight was delayed four times and I got to my hotel room at 2am only to be up at 7am. I am inspired after spending the day learning, listening, doing, and being with fellow educators. I am also reflective.

It’s been a while since I last blogged. I can explain to you that it is because life happens. There is work, salary point classes, holidays, but the reality is I need to do better. Don’t think for a minute that my silence on this blog speaks to inaction. In the last few months my team and I have created an All Girls STEAM Club that has so many members they meet four days a week to accommodate them. We have started a VEX Robotics Club open to anyone who can get to school early. Our robotics elective has taken off and the robots come to life every day. Our Makerspace is being used to create, to engineer, to be creative. We have done more this school year than I dreamed possible.

Below is a video from our last Coffee with the Principal meeting for parents. We brought the girls from the All Girls STEAM Club in to be introduced. These girls are the future and I intend to stand back and get out of their way!

The JB Way

The world of education is broken down into three parts: elementary, secondary, and higher ed. There are some pretty distinct differences bet...